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Evaluate the view that the UK has a democratic deficit. £2.99   Add to cart

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Evaluate the view that the UK has a democratic deficit.

Essay Plan for Edexcel A-Level Governmet and Politics - clear three paragraph structure - clear point and counter-point structre - includes definitions - includes recent and relevant examples

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  • July 26, 2024
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“Evaluate the view that the UK has a democratic deficit.” [30 marks]
AGREE

Definitions
- democratic deficit: state where democratic pressures and systems aren’t
functioning effectively
- strong democracy requires high participation levels, effective representation,
legitimate government with a clear mandate and effective rights protection

1) Electoral system: FPTP
Point: FPTP creates democratic deficit by under-representing minority parties
Examples: In 2015, UKIP won 3.8 million votes and just 1 seat
SNP won 1.5 million votes and 56 seats
governments are elected with an average of 35-40% of the vote
Counter point: FPTP improves democracy because it is simple and easy to
understand, and is more stable
Examples: prevents extremist parties such as the BNP

2) Participation levels
Point: participation crisis in elections means democracy is invalidated due to
low number of deciding votes
Example: only 68% turnout in 2017
party membership levels are at an all time low
Conservatives lost over 1 million party members since the 1970’s
Counter point: increased participation in other democratic avenues e.g.
referendums, protests and petitions
Examples: 2003 Iraq War protests reached over 1 million participants
2014 Scottish referendum had an over 80% turnout

3) Representation
Point: lack of descriptive representation in executive and legislative branch
Examples: 34% of MP’s are female representing 51% of the population
10% of MP’s are racial minorities representing 20% of the pop.
20% of MP’s are privately educated and represent 7% of the pop.
Counter point: representation has improved greatly and substantive
representation is increasing
Examples: female prime ministers vs. no female presidents
Marriage (Same-Sex) Act 2013, passed by David Cameron

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